159 Mo. App. 49 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1911
This is a suit for damages accrued to plaintiff.on account of the death of her husband through the alleged negligent wrongful act of defendant. Plaintiff recovered and defendant prosecutes the appeal.
Defendant, incorporated, is a manufacturing chemist in the city of St. Louis and plaintiff’s husband was in its employ, at the time of his death, as a chemist. Plaintiff’s husband came to his death through being crushed between the floor of an elevator and the beam over the entrance thereto, in defendant’s establishment. The elevator which occasioned his injury and death was maintained by defendant between what is known as its morphine and cocaine buildings, and was entered from either building. The two buildings referred to are four or five stories in height and the elevator communicates with each floor. The particular elevator involved here was designed orginally for carrying freight and parcels from one floor to another but was continuously used as a passenger elevator as well, by the employees of defendant. The elevator was operated by electric power and those who desired to use it entered therein and pulled a rope which started
Section 2237 of the ordinances of the city of St. Louis provides that the users of all power elevators shall employ a competent person to operate and run the same, who shall have a proper knowledge of all the parts of the machinery for the working of the elevator of which he may have charge, and who shall not be less than sixteen years of age and of industrious and sober habits. This ordinance is set forth in the petition, and a breach of the obligation which it enjoins is declared upon as the ground of recovery. All of the proof shows the elevator was in perfect condition,
The circuit court referred the case to the jury as though the ordinance devolved upon defendant the duty to maintain some competent person or persons over sixteen years of age in charge of the elevator and it was not a compliance therewith, to permit any employee not so specially charged to operate it as he chose. It is argued here on the part of defendant that, though such be true, no recovery may be allowed, for the reason it does not appear that the dereliction averred and proved operated proximately to occasion the,, death of plaintiff’s husband. It is said that, under the ordinance as construed by the Supreme Court, no obligation is enjoined on defendant to keep an operator actually upon the elevator, and that unless one was upon it at the time plaintiff’s husband was injured, the result could not have been avoided. There can be no doubt that the judgment of the Supreme Court, in Purcell v. Tennent Shoe Co., 187 Mo. 276, 86 S. W. 121, goes to the effect that the ordinance counted upon here may be sufficiently complied with by the owner of the elevator keeping a competent operator over sixteen years of age specially charged with the duty of operating the elevator on the separate floors of a building. So much and no more is pointedly determined in the case cited, for there it appeared the proprietor had a stock man over sixteen years of age who was a competent person within the sense of the ordinance, Specially charged with the duty of running the elevator for persons on his particular floor. The court declared such to be sufficient. ‘ Though the judgment in that case essentially concludes that the ordinance does not require a competent operator to be at all times on the elevator, it does not determine that defendant should not keep a competent person specially charged with operating the elevator on the first and
But it is argued, as defendant had posted notices about the building that the elevator on which plaintiff’s husband came to his death was not to be used except for the carriage of freight, decedent should be declared
It is argued that as the evidence shows Mr. Thomp-Mns approached the shaft on the third floor of the building and rang the elevator bell about the same time plaintiff’s husband entered it on the first floor, if not an instant before, the decedent should be declared guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law for having undertaken to go upon a moving elevator. No one saw Mr. Dunlap go into the elevator and it cannot be affirmed that he did so while the elevator was moving, though the proof affords a strong inference to that effect. There can be no doubt that he' had a right to go into the elevator to be conveyed to his office on the second floor, for such is shown to be a usual custom among the employees. But the law cast upon him the duty to exercise ordinary care in so doing. It may be that Tompkins started the elevator at the very time plaintiff’s husband was stepping therein, thus precipitating him forward in such a position as to occasion his injury as the elevator arose. It does not appear conclusively that plaintiff’s
It is true there is evidence to the effect that one of the employees heard the signal bell sound while decedent was about twenty feet away but approaching the elevator. On this, it is especially urged we should declare him negligent as a matter of law, for it is said he must have entered the carriage when it was in motion. We do not accept the argument as a sound one, for though the signal bell was then sounded, no one said, or can say, the elevator started before Dunlap entered it. As we understand it, several signal bells were sounded about that time and decedent might have covered the space of twenty feet to the elevator during the interval before it started, as he,is shown to have been young and alert. We repeat, it may be he entered the carriage simultaneously with, and at the instant of, its first movement, in which event' he should not be declared negligent as a matter of law, for men of ordinary prudence frequently do the same. Of course, in the absence of proof to the contrary, the law indulges a presumption to the effect that plaintiff’s husband conducted himself at the time of entering the elevator in accordance with the precepts of ordinary care for his safety. [Buesching v. Gaslight Co., 73 Mo. 219; Johnston v. St. L. & S. F. R. Co., 150 Mo. App. 304, 130 S. W. 413.] In view of this presumption and different inferences which the evidence affords touching the matter of the negligence, if any, of decedent, that question was one for the jury.
While plain-tiff’s husband was yet pinioned in the elevator and during an interval of consciousness, Dr. Lamar, defendant’s superintendent, made some in